In re Donnelly

188 F. 1001, 16 Ohio F. Dec. 619, 1910 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 35
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedNovember 12, 1910
DocketNo. 1,534
StatusPublished

This text of 188 F. 1001 (In re Donnelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Donnelly, 188 F. 1001, 16 Ohio F. Dec. 619, 1910 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 35 (N.D. Ohio 1910).

Opinion

KIEEITS, District Judge.

In March, 1909, Eouis Becker, claiming to be a creditor of Michael Donnelly, filed a petition in involuntary bankruptcy against Donnelly in this court, and, among other alleged acts of bankruptcy, charged in the petition that within four months prior to the filing of the petition, while insolvent, andi for the purpose of defrauding, hindering, and delaying his creditors, and with intent to prefer the creditor hereinafter named over his other creditors, said Donnelly conveyed 100 acres of land in Henry county, Ohio, by mortgage, to one J. D. Groll, to secure the sum of $15,000, which mortgage was recorded on the 9th of December, 1908. Don-nelly answered the petition, taking issue with the allegations asserting him to be a bankrupt and demanding a trial by jury, andi that question is yet to be tried. In August last, the petitioning creditor, Becker, filed a petition in this case for an injunction, alleging that one Dennis D. Donovan, assignee of the Citizens’ State Banking Company, of Napoleon, Ohio, has begun an action in the common pleas court of Henry county, Ohio, against said Donnelly and others, to foreclose the mortgage above described, and asking for a writ of injunction forbidding said assignee Donovan or any person under him from further prosecuting the foreclosure suit in the state court, and asking for the appointment of a receiver in this proceeding. Upon this petition a restraining order was issued without notice, andi the matter is now before the court upon the motion of the assignee [1002]*1002Donovan to dissolve the temporary injunction upon three grounds the principal one and the only one which the court cares to consider being that this court in this case is without jurisdiction in the premises. The motion is overruled as to the other grounds without comment.

Counsel for the assignee, in arguing the motion, relies principally upon the cases of In re Wells (D. C.) 114 Fed. 222, In re Brown (D. C.) 104 Fed. 762, and an opinion by Judge Tayler, of the Circuit Court of this district and division, in the case of Arthur Clark v. Norwalk Steel & Iron Company, 188 Fed. 999.

Collier, in the eighth edition of his work on Bankruptcy, on page 32, note 88, suggests that the court in Re Wells carries the doctrine of comity too far, and in note 174 on page 50 suggests that this case cannot be considered of much authority outside of its own district. Whether or not this comment is just, the facts of the case are so different from the facts of the case at bar as to make it easily possible to distinguish the propositions involved in the respective cases, for, to use the language of the court in the Wells Case, the situation there was this:

“After the petition in bankruptcy was filed, but before the receiver was appointed, and before the adjudication of bankruptcy, the state court took possession of the property now in controversy. The trustee, by direction of the referee, appeared in the state court, and asked leave (which was granted) to defend against the action in replevin. He filed his answer therein a year or more ago. The trustee now filed in this court his bill in equity,- asking that the carriage company, by writ of injunction, be enjoined from the further prosecution of the replevin action in the state court.”

The Brown Case, in 104 Fed., was a case in which the bankrupt had no possession of the property at the time of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy, but it was in the possession of a creditor, who held it on pledge with power of sale, and the case simply decides that the court may not enjoin the exercise of such power where there is no claim that the same will be exercised in a fraudulent or oppressive manner, and the case is one of those cited by Remington on Bankruptcy, p. 1089, as authority for this rule, depicting the summary jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court:

“If tbe possession, actual or constructive, is in the bankrupt or in his agent or in some one not claiming a beneficial interest in it, or is in the receiver, marshal, or trustee in bankruptcy, the bankruptcy court has summary jurisdiction over it by orders made in the bankruptcy proceedings themselves, and may summarily order its surrender or delivery, may bring all parties claiming interests in it into court, and may determine all rights to it. If, on the other hand, some third party claiming some beneficial interest in the property has possession, * * * then such third party need not come into the bankruptcy proceedings for his rights.”

In the Clark Case, in this' district, the facts were that the property was in the hands of the Circuit Court through a receiver before an involuntary petition in bankruptcy was filed, which alleged, among other • things, that the obtaining of the appointment of a receiver was in itself an act of bankruptcy. In the case in the Circuit Court certain parties were allowed, upon their application, to file intervening petitions setting up mortgages against real estate in the posses[1003]*1003sion of the receiver, and asking to have the mortgage foreclosed. In the meantime, nothing more had been done with the bankruptcy case, but the alleged bankrupt answered the intervening petitions, setting up the bankruptcy proceedings as a defense to the foreclosure of the mortgages, and the matter was before the court upon the demurrers of the mortgagees to these answers, and the court held that the property was in the jurisdiction and custody of the Circuit Court, and that it was the only court in which any person under the circumstances could come to assert any rights which he had against the property.

The great distinction between the Wells Case, and the Clark Case, on the one hand, and the case at bar, lies in the fact that in those cases the property in question was actually in the custody of the other court, whereas in this case the property is not in the custody of any court, but is in the possession of the bankrupt subject to the determination of these bankruptcy proceedings, and the relief sought is to restrain a creditor from enforcing an alleged lien, the creation of which is before this court for consideration upon a claim that it was of itself an act of bankruptcy. This court regards this distinction between the facts as vital.

The court finds, for the exercise of the power attacked in. this motion, authority in subdivision 15 of section 2 of the bankruptcy act (Act July 1, 1898, c. 541, 30 Stat. 545 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 3421]), wherein jurisdiction is given “to make such orders, issue such process, and enter such judgments, in addition to those specifically provided for, as may he necessary for the enforcement of the provisions of this act.” Collier, in commenting on this provision (8th Ed. pp. 49, 50), says:

‘'Generally speaking, it may be availed of to compel anytliing which ought to be done for, or to prevent anything which ought not to be done against, the enforcement of the law; provided' the court of bankruptcy has jurisdiction of the person or the subject matter. * * ‘s Early in the administration of the present law, the injunction was frequently used to prevent the dissipation of assets to which the bankrupt had title. * * * The power to enjoin is inherent hi the court of bankruptcy as a court of: equity. * * 4 That tlie broad phrasing of subdivision 15 amounts to an express ratification of tilia inherent power has not been doubted. The exercise of it, like the quasi criminal remedy of contempt, is essential to the due enforcement of the act.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 F. 1001, 16 Ohio F. Dec. 619, 1910 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-donnelly-ohnd-1910.